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Comment: Book is in very good condition with minor wear to cover, tight binding. Previous owner's name inscribed on first page.

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“Bernstein has become a guru to a peculiarly ’90s group: well-educated, Internet-powered people intent on investing well―and with minimal ‘help’ from professional Wall Street.”--Robert Barker, BusinessWeek

William Bernstein is one of today’s most unlikely financial heroes. A practicing neurologist, he used his self-taught investment knowledge and research to build a popular investor’s website. Now, in the plain-spoken The Intelligent Asset Allocator, he shows independent investors how to build a diversified portfolio―without the help of a financial advisor. A breath of fresh air for investors tired of overly technical investment tomes, this book will help investors:

Learn the risk/reward characteristics of various investment types

Understand and apply portfolio theory for an improved risk/reward ratio

Sharpen their focus, and take control of their investment programs

William Bernstein runs a website―www.efficientfrontier.com―known for its quarterly journal of asset allocation and portfolio theory, Efficient Frontier.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A practicing neurologist in remote coastal Oregon, Bernstein comes to the problems of saving and investing not from a broker's perspective, but as someone who had to figure this out himself, from first principles up. Business Week 20010202

From the Back Cover

"As its title suggest, Bill Bernstein's fine book honors the sensible principles of Benjamin Graham in the Intelligent Investor Bernstein's concepts are sound, his writing crystal clear, and his exposition orderly. Any reader who takes the time and effort to understand his approach to the crucial subject of asset allocation will surely be rewarded with enhanced long-term returns." - John C. Bogle, Founder and former Chief Executive Officer, The Vanguard Group President, Bogle Financial Markets Research Center Author, common Sense on Mutual Funds.

"Bernstein has become a guru to a peculiarly '90s group: well-educated, Internet-powered people intent on investing well - and with minimal 'help' from professional Wall Street." - Robert Barker, Columnist, BusinessWeek.

William Bernstein is an unlikely financial hero. A practicing neurologist, he used his self-taught investment knowledge and research to build one of today's most respected investor's websites. Now, let his plain-spoken The Intelligent Asset Allocator show you how to use the time-honored techniques of asset allocation to build your own pathway to financial security - one that is easy-to-understand, easier-to-apply, and supported by 75 years of solid history and wealth-building results.

More About the Author

William Bernstein, Ph.D., M.D., is a retired neurologist in Oregon. Known for his website on asset allocation and portfolio theory Efficient Frontier, Dr. Bernstein is also a co-principal in the money management firm Efficient Frontier Advisors, has authored several best-selling books on finance and history, and is often quoted in the national financial media.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

I would have to agree with John Bogle's endorsement: "This is a great book!"While Malkiel's Random Walk covers Modern Portfolio Theory, Bogle covers the virtues of index investing, and Graham, Lynch and Fisher cover individual stock selection, studies show that asset allocation alone is responsible for over 90% of a portfolio's performance in the long run. Yet asset allocation theory seems to me to be under-represented in the investment literature for non-professionals.Bernstein's book goes a long way to correct this gap. He starts out almost too simply. Bernstein takes the reader step-by-step through a discussion of basic financial math and statistics (hitting variance and correlation coefficients in particular) as he builds the case and explanation behind asset diversification. He writes to an intelligent audience but does not assume a mathematical or financial background. I like that he encourages the reader to take a chapter at a time. He instructs the reader to finish the chapter, and then put the book down and get back to life. This adds to the methodical tone of the book: a step at a time.In the final chapter "Odds and Ends" the author changes gears. Suddenly we are in the world of - well - odds and ends, the finer points of portfolio management. This was the most interesting part of the book for me. Here Bernstein reviews the case for index investing and - of special interest to me - value investing. What is the premium in returns for small vs. large caps, value vs. growth? Which MPT stat, P/E or P/B is the better predictor of future performance? Why is value averaging so important and yet so counter intuitive? This chapter alone was worth the price of the book.Finally, Bernstein shares the wealth. The bibliography and recommending reading sections are terrific.Read more ›

I'm quoted on the back cover of Bill's book.In my quote, I admit that Bill's smarter than me. True enough--but that doesn't really indicate that the book is any good. After all, a whole lot of bright people in financial services have written books, most of which are hazardous to your wealth.Bill's book is different because Bill's personality is different. First, he's honest. He wants to be correct, not to get his hands on your money. Second, he has no apparent ego. If he believes something and you convince him otherwise, then he will happily change his belief. The first trait is uncommon among smart people who work in financial services. The second is rarer still.This book isn't especially difficult to read but its concepts are profound. If you understand it, you will know more about the fundamental principles of investing than 99.9% of all MBAs and Chartered Financial Analysts. Eventually, I suspect, you'll end up richer for your troubles, as well.Caveats. This book isn't for stock traders or anyone else who believes that they can get rich quickly. In addition, it's not beach reading. Although Bill writes very clearly and well, the book does take on serious material, so it demands serious attention. If you don't like to think, you won't enjoy the book.If you're still with me, buy the darn thing!

This is a superb investment book. Bernstein first covers basic statistical topics and historical risk and return data for stocks, bonds and bills. He then presents a lucid discussion of portfolio theory and its applications for the small investor. The most important result of this theory is that the risk and return of a portfolio are very different from the risk and return of its constituent parts, so that adding a 'risky' asset to a portfolio can actually decrease the portfolio's overall volatility. This discussion requires only minimal mathematical background. Bernstein then takes on the controversial topic of market efficiency. He also describes stock valuation models, current valuation levels, growth and value investing, Fama and French's three factor model, the concept of the efficient frontier and numerous other important topics in finance. But the discussion throughout is very clear and understandable as well as practical. After making a compelling case for index investing with periodic rebalancing, Bernstein presents helpful Vanguard and DFA model portfolios. What the author has done is to take the most significant results from academic finance and translated them into English for the individual investor. He has done investors a great service.

My copy of William Bernstein's new book, " The Intelligent Asset Allocator," has arrived, and I give the book a very high recommendation for anyone interested in this vital subject. Fundamental mathematical concepts of geometric return, standard deviation, and correlation are given clear and understandable definition. The real-world behavior of investment portfolios is dissected with intelligence and insight.Portfolio optimization (its limitations as well as its legitimate uses), portfolio rebalancing, indexing (Mr. Bernstein's arguments against active management might even surpass Mr. Bogle's), Dunn's Law, efficient markets, random walks, momentum factors, the three-factor model, behavioral finance, and numerous other topics are given full and rewarding discussion.I especially found Mr. Bernstein's treatment of investor utility functions to be especially insightful. In addition to the usual concern with risk tolerance, he suggests an investor must decide on how simple or complicated one`s investment plan must be, and also how tolerant or intolerant one will be concerning tracking error to the market index as fundamental to implementing one's asset allocation plan.In implementing asset allocations Mr. Bernstein considers the two indexing giants: Vanguard and DFA. Readers will find this section especially valuable.This just scratches the surface; thought-provoking insights are available on just about every page of this absorbing book.My recommendation may carry very little weight in your estimations, so I would add that the front jacket to the text contains a small, sunny emblem with the following inscription:"This is a GREAT book!" John C. BogleAmen to that, blb